EAN13
9782906519893
Éditeur
DUCS BRETAGNE
Date de publication
17 décembre 2021
Collection
LES INDISPENSAB
Nombre de pages
82
Dimensions
17,8 x 14,8 x 0,9 cm
Poids
200 g
Langue
eng
Langue originale
fre

Nantes And The Atlantic Slave Trade

Krystel Gualdé

DUCS BRETAGNE

Prix public : 7,90 €

“For the Africans who lived through the experience of depor­tation to the Americas, confronting the unknown with nei­ther preparation nor challenge was no doubt petrifying. [...] But that is nothing yet. What is terrifying partakes of the abyss [...].”Édouard Glissant, “The Open Boat” in The Poetics of Relation. (Translated by Betsy Wing. Ann Harbor, University of Michigan Press, 1997.)The Atlantic slave trade affected between thirteen and seventeen million men, women and children, who were captured, sold and deported from Africa to colonies in America where they were enslaved. The slave trade took place primarily between the early 16 th century and the late 19 th century. France played an important role in this trafficking, organizing almost 14% of all slave-trading expeditions. The port of Nantes was France’s largest slave-trading harbour. The Nantes History Museum takes an uncompromising look at the history of the city within the global context of this human trade and the abolitionist movement in Europe and around the world.Translation by Emma Lingwood.
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